20 Wash. 53 | Wash. | 1898
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was a proceeding originally instituted before the city council of the city of Hew .Whatcom, for the purpose of re-assessing property claimed to have been benefited by an alleged improvement. The appellant appeared and filed objections to the proposed re-assessment in so far as the same affected its property. The objections were overruled and appeal was taken to the superior court, the judgment there being in favor of the re-assessment. Erom such judgment an appeal is taken to this court. It is the first and main contention of the appellant that this case should be dismissed, and a motion is made, in accordance with that contention, to reverse the
“ The term ‘judicial power/ as used in the constitution,, is not capable of a precise definition. It is included in the power to hear and determine, but does not exhaust the power. That it embraces the hearing and determination of all suits and actions, whether public or private, there can be no doubt. But we think that it is equally clear that it does not necessarily include the power to. hear and determine a matter that is not in the nature of a suit or action between parties. Power to hear and determine matters more or less directly affecting public and private rights is conferred upon, and exercised by, administrative and executive officers. But this has not been held to affect the validity of statutes by which such powers., are conferred. . . . The term ‘judicial power’ has never been taken with such latitude of construction in the-usages and customs of our American commonwealths, and to so extend the jurisdiction of the courts would lead to-the most embarrassing results, with little or no compensation whatever.”
It can readily be understood that if all quasi judicial power or discretion were taken from administrative or executive officers, and every question of this kind, how
“ The objection,” says the court, “that the act invests the board of examiners with judicial functions is fully answered by the cases of Elmore v. Overton, 104 Ind. 548 (4 N. E. 197, 54 Am. Rep. 343); Eastman v. State, supra (10 N. E. 97), and the cases there cited. If the appellant were correct in his assumption, then every school examiner who examines an applicant for license, every clerk who accepts and acts upon an affidavit, every auditor who accepts an abstract of title when he loans school funds, and every officer who approves a report, would exercise judicial functions. That they do, in some degree, act judicially, is true, and so does every officer, from the governor to constable, who is invested with discretionary powers; for the governor, when he issues a requisition for a fugitive from justice, decides many things, and the constable, when he executes a writ or a warrant, exercises a discretion; but no one of these offi
In Gilbert v. Board of Police and Fire Com’rs, 11 Utah, 378 (40 Pac. 264), it was held that the act which required the board to prefer charges, give accused a hearing, examine witnesses, and decide the question on evidence, was not violative of the organic act, which provided that the judicial power should be vested in the supreme, district and probate courts, and in justices of the peace. In discussing this proposition the court said:
“ The words ‘judicial powers,’ when applied to such courts, mean the authority vested in the jndges. Bouvier. In this sense these words are used in the organic act, and nowhere is there any provision in said act which prohibits the legislature from creating a ministerial board, and requiring of it the performance of judicial acts as incidental to its ministerial capacity. While such boards are essentially ministerial, and may be, to a certain extent, legislative bodies, still they may be, and frequently are, endowed with, quasi judicial power to proceed in a summary way, and out of the course of the common law. A city council is such a body, and so likewise is a board of county commissioners, or county court, as denominated in this territory; and yet no one has pretended to question the power of such a body in such a proceeding, as being inconsistent with the organic act.”
It is asserted hy the appellant in its reply brief that these cases are not in point; but we think they are exactly in point, and unquestionably sustain the validity of laws of the character of the one assailed in this case. ISTor do we think that the cases cited by appellant intend to enunciate any different principle. For instance, the case largely relied npon by appellant, viz., People ex rel. Kern
“We are not unmindful of the well-settled rule that there are many cases in which ministerial officers exercise quasi-judicial powers or discretions, and yet the laws conferring such powers are held to be no violation of the constitutional provision under consideration. These cases are referred to and commented upon in Owners of Lands v. People, Stookey, supra, but what we have already said sufficiently distinguishes the powers conferred upon the registrar by this act from all such cases.”
Owners of Lands v. People, Stookey, referred to by the court just mentioned, is reported in 113 Ill. 309, where it was held that the drainage act, which gave an appeal from the drainage commissioners’ orders by any person interested who was dissatisfied, to the county surveyor, county treasurer and sheriff, who were to constitute an appeal board and hear and decide all appeals, was not unconstitutional, as conferring judicial powers upon a non-judicial body. In discussing the question of judicial powers, the court quotes from Cooley on Torts, p. 375, where that author says:
“ Official duties are supposed to be susceptible of classification under the three heads of legislative, executive and judicial, corresponding to the three departments of government bearing the same designations; but the classification cannot be very exact, and there are many officers whose duties cannot properly, or, at least, exclusively, be arranged under either of these heads. A single case may suffice as an illustration. The officers chosen to levy*62 and apportion taxes for the inferior municipal subdivisions of the state are, in some cases, authorized: 1, to determine what taxes shall be levied within the municipality for the year; 2, to value the property which is to be assessed for these taxes; 3, to apportion the taxes as between the several items of property assessed; and 4, to receive from their superior officers the statements of taxes to be assessed for more general purposes, and to apportion these in the same way. The first of these duties partakes of the legislative, the second of the judicial, the third and fourth of the executive; but, in strictness, none of them can be classed as belonging specially to either department of the government, and the officers who perform them are usually designated administrative officers.” ,
In this opinion is cited People v. Percells, 3 Gilm. 59, and Hawthorne v. People, 109 Ill. 302 (50 Am. Rep. 610), where it was held that statutes conferring power upon clerks of courts to judge of the sufficiency of bonds did not confer judicial power, within the meaning of this article of the constitution, notwithstanding the acts to be performed required the exercise of judgment and discretion, and were in their nature, therefore, judicial; also, Campbell v. Head, 13 Ill. 122, where it'was held that the assessment of damages by the court, under the sixth section of the “Replevin Act” then in force, and Ross v. Irving, 14 Ill. 171, that the assessment of damages by -commissioners under the “Occupying Claimant’s Law,” were not judicial acts; Nealy v. Brown, 1 Gilm. 10, where the laying out and opening of roads by county commissioners was held not to be an exercise of judicial powers; and Bowe v. Bowen, 28 Ill. 116, where it was held that the trial of the rights of property before a sheriff and jury was not a judicial proceeding; and many other cases of like import. And as these cases, many of them, construed statutes that conferred powers which involved as much, or more, discretion than is granted by the statute
Many other assignments of error are made by the appellant, and we have examined laboriously the lengthy record that is presented here of the trial in the court below, and, without specially reviewing each assignment, we are satisfied that the findings of the court in every respect were based upon the weight of testimony, and that no substantial error was committed by the court in the admission or rejection of testimony.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
Gordon, Anders and Reavis, JJ., concur.